Nostalgia for a Unified Realm
265
interpretations of the past.
78
The New Mirror
, while stopping short of re-
emphasizing karmic causality in its postface, embarks on a final discus-
sion of the morality of writing. In contrast,
The Water Mirror
is explicit,
if typically pessimistic, when the narrator reports her source’s final utter-
ance as follows: “On the whole, having been born after the Buddha’s death
in this small country at the end of a
kalpa
of destruction, it’s precisely
the badness of things that is the true principle.”
79
This reminds the reader
yet again of the historical trajectory upon which the events of
The Water
Mirror
are to be placed. (Even
The China Mirror
similarly, though indi-
rectly, suggests a path of decline in its surviving portions.) Yet
The Clear
Mirror
offers no interpretation of history as a teaching tool. Unlike the
quasi-oracular Heian
Mirrors
, it makes no promises to shed light on any-
thing beyond “what happened next.”
80
In short, the account offers a what,
but not a why.
81
To be sure, the author of
The Clear Mirror
would face a dilemma simi-
lar to
The Water Mirror
’s were he to address the problem of cosmological
logic. Like
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